Pete Carroll's club owns the NFL's most intimidating defense, but Mike Munchak's team has a defensive unit certainly capable of carrying its team.

However, can the Titans defense be good enough to lead to a major upset victory?

Let's examine.

First off, not many expected Tennessee to be 3-2 heading into this matchup—and that point is important. Because despite small strides of improvement from quarterback Jake Locker, the Titans offense has been, statistically, pretty similar to where it finished the 2012 season:

Tennessee Titans Offensive Comparison

Yards Per Drive

Points Per Drive

Touchdowns Per Drive

2012

26.69

1.43

.147

2013

26.29

1.74

.190

Football Outsiders

It's exhibited slight improvement scoring the football, but the defensive production and overall efficiency have been much better:

Tennessee Titans Offensive Comparison

Yards Per Drive

Points Per Drive

Touchdowns Per Drive

2012

32.71

2.26

.255

2013

25.68

1.33

.143

Football Outsiders

The Titans have gotten stingier on defense due to their amazing defensive line depth and their young core collectively taking the next step in 2013. On the defensive line, Jurrell Casey is quietly becoming a superstar, and in the pass-rushing department, Derrick Morgan isn't far behind.

And under the same playing-time condition at the 4-3 defensive end position, only Robert Quinn and Michael Bennett have a higher overall PFF rating than Morgan, per PFF.

The linebacking corps is loaded with athleticism (see: Brown, Zach and Ayers, Akeem), and all the raw physical skill has blossomed into consistent contributions across the board. In the secondary, Alterraun Verner is PFF's top-rated cornerback, and Jason McCourty is the seventh-highest ranked. At safety, Michael Griffin and George Wilson are in PFF's top 20 through five games.

Overall, the Titans will have to be especially tight on defense playing in Seattle.

Most quarterbacks are better in front of their home crowd than when they're on the road, but check the disparity in Russell Wilson's statistics from 2012:

Russell Wilson 2012 Home vs. Away Disparity

Completion %

Yards Per Attempt

TD

INT

QB Rating

Home

64.6

9.17

17

2

123.6

Away

63.8

7.05

9

8

83.1

ESPN

Ironically, Wilson's completion percentage is almost five percentage points lower at home than on the road this season, but his home QB rating is 102.5 compared to 85.1 away from home.

The Titans offense will have a hard time moving the football on a Seattle defense that ranks 11th in yards per drive, fifth in points per drive and seventh in touchdowns per drive this season. But Tennessee's rather underrated defense is good enough to slow down the Seahawks' offensive attack in a game that just may ultimately be more tightly contested than many expect.